Homemade Deli Meat – With and Without Ham Maker

written 4/15/2024, updated 7/21/2025

The juices that came out of this… YUM

What

Making deli meat at home by combining different cuts of meat (can be same kind of meat or a mixture) with and without a Ham Maker

Why

Ability to control what’s put inside your own cold cuts, and can be cheaper

Time and Effort

Time: A few hours

Effort: Easy

Ingredients

Meat

Seasonings

Supplies

Mixing Bowls

Cutting Board

Knives/Meat Grinder/Processor

Ham Maker

Plastic Wrap/Sausage Wrapping

Foil

Pot/Rice Cooker/Oven

Ham Maker Method

Using a Ham Maker is really the easiest way to make a formed meat, especially if you want to mix several cuts or meats together. It can also be used without mixing meats or grinding them. Ham Makers make the wrapping step a cinch.

Ham Maker

Ingredients and Supplies

Meat, Seasonings, Water, Ham Maker, Cooking Bag, Tall Pot, Pot Thermometer, Stove, Refrigerator

Time

30 minutes Prep + 2 hours Cook + overnight Chill

Process

  • Wash your Ham Maker if you haven’t
  • Fill a tall pot with Water, and heat it up on the stove (Target: 182-195F)
  • Choose your meat:

Whole Meat – an entire piece of meat, uncut (e.g. pork loin, pork shoulder, whole breast)

Mixed Meat – a formed mash of different cuts or combinations of meat types

  • Prepare your selection by removing veins, bones, and sinews. Decide if you want to keep, and how much, any fat
  • If using a meat mixture, chop, mince, grind, process, or any combination as desired
  • Season your choice of meat, to taste
  • Allow to set for a few minutes
  • In the meantime, line the Ham Maker with a Cooking Bag
  • When ready, place meat into the canister
  • Twist the top of the bag closed
  • Close the Ham Maker with the press and lid, then insert the thermometer
  • When water in the pot reaches between 180 – 195F, place the full Ham Maker in the water, making sure the water level sits above the fill line of the meat inside
  • Keep the temperature steady (I set my gas stove low-medium)
  • Cook until internal temperature reaches the safe cooking temperature for your meat choice, about 2 hours
  • Place the hot Ham Maker on a hot pad in the refrigerator and cool overnight
  • When fully cooled, run canister under warm water to release the meat

Slice and Enjoy!

Pictures!!

Chopped, Minced, and Processed
Removing Air Bubbles
Squish
It’s Hot!
Chilling
Opening
Pour out the juice
Release
Still in Bag
There it is!

Ta-DAAA!! The hole is where both the twist top of the plastic and the thermometer when in. You can see the texture differences from the different cuts/processing of the meat. Delicious!

No Ham Maker Methods

Sous Vide and Smoked are two methods of making this. If you don’t have a sous vide device, there are alternatives

Sous Vide Method

There are different ways to sous vide without actually using a sous vide device. You can use an oven, a Dutch oven or a pot, and even a rice cooker.

Ingredients and Supplies

Meat, Seasonings, Mixing Bowls, Water, Pot/Oven/Rice Cooker, Thermometer, Refrigerator

Time

35 minutes Prep + 2 hours Cook + Chill

Prepare Meat

*Pictures below

  • Remove any veins, sinews, and bones. Remove or use fat as desired
  • Choose your meat:

Whole Meat – an entire piece of meat, uncut (e.g. pork loin, pork shoulder, whole breast)

Mixed Meat – a formed mash of different cuts or combinations of meat types

  • If using Mixed Meat, prepare a [diced: minced: ground] meat ratio of [¾ : ½ : ⅓ lb] or [350 : 250 : 150 g]
  • Season the meat, to taste (If desired, season each texture a bit differently for a combined complex flavor)

Wrap

  • Set out a double layer of plastic wrap and sprinkle half with smoked paprika and whatever else you’d like
  • Turn out meat mixture
  • Tightly roll into desired shape and size

NOTE: Make sure wrapped meat log(s) will fit into your cooking implement so it can be covered in water!

  • Secure the ends

Cooking

Here are 3 methods of cooking the meat ham without dedicated Sous Vide equipment

Pot Method

  • Fill with water
  • Bring water to a boil
  • Place meat log into the water (make sure meat is and will be fully submerged the whole time)
  • Bring to a boil again
  • Turn off heat and place lid tightly on top
  • Leave for 45 minutes to 1 hour
  • Check for doneness with thermometer
  • Repeat if necessary
  • When done, let cool and enjoy, or chill in refrigerator

Oven Method

  • Preheat oven to 215 – 220F (100C)
  • Select a deep dish or oven safe pot
  • Boil enough water to fill
  • Pour in boiling water
  • Place meat log
  • Cover with parchment paper
  • Cover that in foil and/or a tight lid
  • Cook for 1-3 hours until 160F (75C)
  • Remove from oven
  • Place in an ice bath and/or refrigerator until internal temperature is 50F (10C)

Rice Cooker Method

  • Boil water
  • Pour boiled water into rice cooker
  • Using a thermometer, mix in cold water until water temperature is somewhere between 175-195F
  • Place meat log into water
  • Close
  • Set rice cooker to Keep Warm
  • Cook for about 2 hours
  • Be sure temperature is safe for choice of meat
  • Let cool then enjoy or chill in refrigerator

Pictures (Oven Method)

Ta Da!! Taste was ON POINT

Smoker Method

This method uses a meat grinder then a meat smoker. You can use a dedicated meat grinder, a meat grinding attachment for a stand mixer, or even just a food processor

Prepare Meat

  • Decide on ratio of meat cuts (e.g. [½ : ½] ratio of [skinned chicken thigh : skinless chicken breast])
  • Cut into small pieces

Grind/Process

  • Grind/Process 1st time
  • Grind/Process 2nd time
  • Add any desired seasonings and half of total water

NOTE: For 1lb of meat, add 20ml (⅔ oz. or 1⅓ Tbsp) of water

Total ratio is 40mL water per 1lb (40mL = 1⅓ oz = 2¾ Tbsp)

  • Grind/Process 3rd time

Wrap

  • Place ground meat in a mixing bowl
  • Add the rest of the water, and then mix together really well (should be very sticky)
  • Pump or stuff into an edible or inedible casing (100mm is the largest size I could find on Amazon)
  • Secure the end

Cooking

Overview: 1 hour Dry + 1 hour @ 130F + 1 hour @ 145F + 1 hour @ 160F + more @ 175F

Total: ~5 hours

  • Set smoker to 120F (50C), NO smoke, NO humidity, OPEN dampers to dry the casing for 1 hour
  • Set to 130F (55C), ADD smoke, ADD humidity (water pan), ¾ damper for 1 hour
  • 145F (65C) for 1 hour
  • 160F (72F) for 1 hour
  • 175F (75C) until internal temperature reaches 160F (72C)
  • Place in an ice bath to separate the casing and the meat

Slice and enjoy!

Notes

Attempt 4/14/24: Used Oven Sous Vide Method. Should have added something like cornstarch in the meat mixture to give it some adherence. That and/or changing the ratio to add more ground/pureed meat to fill in the gaps in the meat, while taking away from the original cubed meat. Even if cubing (altered the recipe directions to use smaller pieces), then should process a little. 3 degrees of food processor chopping to make the final product smoother would be more ideal. The way this ended up was more of a headcheese. There IS an obvious complex texture, but it all fell apart easily. The 3 different flavor profiles gave it GREAT taste. Made the mistake of not thinking about the cooking vessel until after rolling the meat. Should have cut it in half and then would have been able to have 2 smaller hams and able to cook it inside of the Dutch oven with the water filled to the top. The way I had it, the water didn’t even cover the whole meat log, so cooking was very uneven. Unsure of how to test internal temperature of meat log without making a mess. Cooking @ 215F took about 2.5 to 3 hours total. Used way too much plastic wrap and wasn’t able to use a lidded dish, just 2 layers of foil. Meat used: Chicken. 3 thighs, 1.5 breast, ¼lb ground chicken (hand squeezed to pulverize). NEXT TIME: more ground chicken, less cubed breast. Add cornstarch for smoothness and adherence. Smaller logs for more even cooking. More food processing. Maybe try using meat casing.

7/21/2025: Used Ham Maker

  • Sous Vide cooking charts recommend cooking chicken at 150F for 1-3 hours.
  • A Ham Maker is a MUCH easier method of doing this. It’s a metal contraption with a spring in it that fits right into a stock pot on the stove and does the same thing neatly. However, if you don’t have one and don’t want one, this is fine, too.
  • There’s always the option of baking or broiling it after the fact for a possible crust or rind? Haven’t attempted that yet

Vegan Doughnut

written 4/8/2024, updated 4/8/2024

What

Vegan yeast doughnuts with optional glaze and/or filling

Main Ingredients

Method 1

2 Cups All-purpose Flour

½ Cup Granulated Sugar

1½ – 2 tsp Active Dry Yeast

½ Cup Plant-based Milk or Water

Pinch of Salt

1-2 tsp of Sugar for Yeast

2 Tbsp Canola Oil

Oil for Frying

Method 2

Egg Replacer: ½ Cup Aquafaba + 3 Tbsp Cornstarch

1½ – 2 tsp Active Dry Yeast

½ Cup Water (warm)

4 Cups All-Purpose Flour

⅓ Cup Granulated Sugar

1 tsp Salt

⅔ Cup Plant-Based Milk

4 Tbsp Vegan Butter (room temp)

Frying Oil

Optional Ingredients

Apple Cider Vinegar, Applesauce (both as egg replacer substitutions), Vanilla Extract

Toppings

  • Original Glaze: 2 Cup Powdered Sugar + 1 Tbsp Vegan Butter (melted) + 2 Tbsp Plant Milk/Water
  • Add any desired extracts or juices to glaze (e.g. lemon, orange)
  • Chocolate: 1 Cup melted dark or milk chocolate + optional 1 tsp Refined Coconut Oil
  • Cinnamon Sugar: 3 Tbsp Granulated Sugar + 1 tsp Cinnamon + optional 2 Tbsp Plant Milk
  • Dairy-free frosting
  • Sprinkles, Chocolate Chips, Candy Pieces, Cookie Pieces
  • Fresh Fruit

Filling

  • Fruit Jam or Preserves
  • Custard:

⅓ Cup Cornstarch

1½ Cup Plant Milk

1¾ Cup Full Fat Coconut Milk

½ Cup Golden Caster Sugar

1 tsp Vanilla Extract

¼ tsp turmeric

4 Tbsp Vegan Butter

  1. Coconut and Plant Milk to saucepan
  2. Whisk in Cornstarch + Milk (small amount) slurry
  3. Add sugar, vanilla extract and turmeric
  4. Medium to high heat
  5. Stirring while it thickens significantly
  6. Whisk in vegan butter
  • Pastry Cream:

1 Cup Plant Milk

¼ Cup All-purpose Flour/Cornstarch

¼ Cup Granulated Sugar

2 Tbsp Canola Oil or 4Tbsp Vegan Butter

1 Tbsp Lemon Juice

1 tsp Vanilla Extract or 1 Vanilla Pod

  1. If using Vanilla Pod, remove seeds from pod and add both pod and seeds to pan, then add milk and simmer low-medium heat for 5-10 min to infuse, then discard vanilla and bring to boil.
  2. Whisk all ingredients in saucepan
  3. Medium-high heat
  4. Stir while thickening
  5. Lower to medium-low temperature
  6. Continue stirring until pudding-like
  7. Remove from heat (can store in fridge for 3 days)
  • Fruit Creams: 1 Cup Pastry Cream + ½ Cup Fruit Puree and ¼ tsp Fruit Extract
  • Chocolate Cream: 1 Cup Pastry Cream + ½ Cup Chocolate
  • Cream Cheese: 1 Cup Pastry Cream + ½ Cup Plant-Based Cream Cheese

Equipment

Roller

Flat Surface

Fryer

Plastic Wrap

Oil Thermometer

Tongs/Spider

Cooking Spray

Bowls

Clean Cloth

Chopstick

Pastry Piping Bag

Round Cutters/Cup/Whatever

Cooling Rack

Paper Towels

Sifter

Stand Mixer

Instructions

Method 1 – No Egg Replacer

Yeast: Warm Milk/Water (½ Cup) to about 105F to 115F and dissolve Sugar (1 tsp), then add Active Dry Yeast (1½ – 2 tsp). Let rest until it blooms

Dough: In a bowl (or stand mixer bowl if using) combine Flour (2 Cups), Sugar (½ Cup), and Oil (2 Tbsp). Then add Yeast

Knead: Knead either by hand (10 minutes) or in the stand mixer with dough hook (5 minutes on level 2) until a dough forms

First Proof: Cover with plastic wrap or a clean cloth and let rise until doubled, about 1-2 hours

Shaping: Roll out onto lightly floured surface (don’t over flour the surface) and roll until about ½” thick

  • Cover any pieces not using
  • Using cutters or a cup or bottle caps or whatever, shape and cut your doughnuts.
  • If filling, just roll into little balls and flatten them

Optional Second Proof: Cover with plastic (add some cooking spray to prevent sticking) and allow to rise for another 30 minutes to an hour

Frying: Heat oil to 360F – 375F

  • Make sure there’s enough for the doughnuts to float
  • Fry for about 30 – 45 seconds until golden brown per side
  • Place on cooling rack with paper towels underneath

Method 2 – Egg Replacer

Egg Replacer: Mix Aquafaba (½ Cup) and Cornstarch (3 Tbsp)

Yeast: Combine Yeast (1½ – 2 tsp) with warm Water (½ Cup) and Sugar (1 tsp). Let rest until it blooms

Dough: In a large bowl, combine Flour (4 Cups), Sugar (⅓ Cup), and Salt (1 tsp), making a well in the center

  • Add Egg Replacer, Milk (⅔ Cup), and Yeast
  • Mix together until the ingredients JUST combine (overdoing it can make the doughnut dense)
  • Optionally, let sit for 30 minutes

Knead: Either 10 minutes by hand or 5 minutes in stand mixer with dough hook set on level 2

  • Add Butter (softened/room temp, 4 Tbsp)
  • Knead again for about 2 minutes until you can pull it thin without it tearing

First Proof: Cover with plastic or a clean cloth until it doubles in size about 1-2 hours

  • Optionally, punch it down then refrigerate overnight. Many bakers recommend this to infuse the yeast flavor into the dough, but not necessary
  • Prepare a working surface lightly with flour (don’t overdo it) and turn out dough.
  • Divide into pieces and cover any pieces not being used
  • Roll into pieces about ½” thick and cut to desired size and shape (you can use cookie cutters, drinking glass, bottle caps, whatever)
  • Re-roll any leftover scraps and let sit for about 30 minutes before repeating (it is recommended to re-roll only one time)

Second Proof: Place cut doughnuts on a tray or parchment lined baking sheet and cover with plastic wrap (may want to use cooking spray to prevent sticking)

  • Allow to rise for 30 minutes to an hour
  • Test by poking with finger: if indentation pops back out, need to rise more. If it stays, then ready for frying
  • Remove plastic wrap

Frying: Heat oil to about 360F to 375F

  • Don’t leave! Each doughnut should take about 30 – 45 seconds per side
  • Fry until golden brown
  • Place on towel-lined cooling rack

Pictures

Glazing and Filling

Allow doughnuts to be cool yet warm before adding glaze or filling

Glaze

Original Glaze: 2 Cup Powdered Sugar + 1 Tbsp Vegan Butter (melted) + 2 Tbsp Plant Milk/Water

Sift powdered Sugar 1 Tbsp at a time into the melted Butter (1Tbsp) and Milk (2 Tbsp) mixture

Stir to combine

Drizzle over doughnuts or dunk top of doughnut into bowl of glaze

  • Add any desired extracts or juices to glaze (e.g. lemon, orange)
  • Add food coloring if desired
  • Top with cookies, candy, cereal, etc
  • Reduce Milk for thicker glaze

*See Toppings section above for more ideas

Filling

Use a chopstick to poke a hole into the side of the doughnut

Wiggle it around to create opening for the fillings

Using pastry piping equipment, pipe in your fillings

Make sure fillings are not super hot

*See Fillings section above for more ideas

Notes

  • I didn’t have any pastry piping, so I tried to use a ziploc bag with the corner snipped off. Ended up having to use the chopstick to force the filling into the depths of the doughnut… Now, mind you, I tried to fill a ring doughnut, but a hole-less doughnut or longer cylindrical like an eclair would be much easier to fill without dedicated piping equipment.
  • I overworked my dough, so it ended up being very dense and not fluffy
  • I already altered the sugar ingredient amount because mine were so bland
  • Glaze needs to be thicker. Mine was so liquidy and didn’t work well
  • Use an oil thermometer!
  • Most notes say to eat doughnuts the same day for best results
  • I ate my jam-filled ring doughnut the next day and I daresay it was better than the day before!
  • Reheated my 5in jelly-filled ring doughnut the next day in the microwave with a wet paper towel on top for about 15 seconds
  • Aquafaba is just the liquid from a can of beans